114 Wis. 261 | Wis. | 1902
A considerable portion of the brief of counsel for appellants is taken up with the proposition that if a person signs a bond as surety, with a verbal condition that it shall not be binding till another person signs as surely, or with some other verbal condition, and leaves the' instrument, subject thereto, with the principal, thereby clothing him with apparent authority to complete the paper and deliver it, or putting him in such a position that he can readily do so without the obligee knowing the facts, and he makes delivery of the paper without complying with the condition, and the ob-ligee, without notice of the breach of authority or such reasonable means of knowledge thereof as would put an ordinarily prudent person upon inquiry as to the facts, in good faith relies upon the instrument, the conditional signer is estopped from denying that he is liable as indicated upon the face of the instrument. It is claimed that such proposition is in harmony with Belden v. Hurlbut, 94 Wis. 562, 69 N. W. 357; New Home S. M. Co. v. Simon, 104 Wis. 120, 80 N. W. 71; and Rehbein v. Rahr, 109 Wis. 136, 143, 85 N. W. 315. We are unable to see how that has anything to do with this case if, as found by the referee and the court, Moore did not execute the bond, conditionally or otherwise, or do anything liable to mislead a person of ordinary prudence into believing that he did. Therefore, we "omit to pass upon it, without intending to cast any doubt upon anything said in either of the cited cases.
By proper exceptions and assignments of error appellants’ counsel challenge the decision of the court above referred to.
Appellants’ counsel contends that it is not essential to the validity of a bond that the signatures of the parties thereto
Having reached the conclusion that the condition of the-instrument sued on, when it came to the hands of appellants, was such as to put them on inquiry as to whether respondent, signed the affidavit with the intention of executing the bond, and that the resulting question was one of fact to be decided upon the evidence, there is little more that need be said. The-question was found by the referee in favor of respondent. The finding was. confirmed by the court. All of the direct evidence supports the finding. No circumstance disclosed by the evidence is inconsistent therewith. In 'other words,, all the evidence produced on the subject supports respondent’s contention that he never executed the bond, conditionally or otherwise; and the decision of the court, that he was-not guilty of negligence which reasonably misled appellants, is warranted by the evidence. It follows that the instrument sued on was never a binding obligation upon respondent Moore, either because of his having signed it or been guilty
By the Oourt. — The judgment is affirmed.